[0001] The present invention relates to an article
[0002] of clothing, more particularly to an improved rain jacket to protect the upper body
and the head of the wearer, especially a cyclist, from getting wet while providing
active ventilation.
[0003] In order to be comfortable, a rainproof jacket, particularly for cyclists or the
like active people, must be well ventilated so as to prevent accumulation, inside
the garment, of heat and water vapor produced by the wearer.
[0004] Almost all known waterproof garments are provided with some openings intended to
insure a certain inside air renewal. The best waterproof jackets are also provided
with special inside linings to prevent condensation. They may also be made out of
vapour permeable waterproof fabric. Unfortunately these jackets tend to be heavier
and more cumbersome than ordinary jackets made of coated nylon fabric. On the other
hand, the openings provided are often closed by flaps which prevent the rain from
getting in the garment. The surface of these openings and the pressures involved are
always too small to insure a significant air circulation. The fact that the cyclists
are moving through the air with a certain speed slightly enhances the air circulation
through the garment, but the openings and their covering flaps are usually not designed
to take full advantage of this dynamic effect.
[0005] Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a rainproof jacket,
particularly for cyclists, ventilated through a very large opening, at the back, covered
with a special flap which behaves as an air deflector as well as a rain screen. The
air deflector is lifted off the ventilation opening when the rider moves and thus
insures an important air circulation through the opening.
[0006] It is another object of the present invention to provide a rain jacket as described
above, which is very light in weight and which may be conveniently rolled up in a
small bundle when not in use.
[0007] Accordingly, the invention is herein broadly claimed as a rain jacket, particularly
for riders, comprising: a back panel having a ventilation window running over at least
a major portion thereof; a rain protection flap fully covering the ventilation opening;
means securing an upper edge of the flap to an upper end of the back panel and means
releasably securing a lower edge of the flap to a lower end of the back panel, and
wherein lateral edges of the flap remain free of the back panel and the ventilation
window whereby to allow air circulation between the ventilation window and the rain
protection flap.
[0008] The rain jacket is preferably provided with a separate wide-brimmed hat which can
be stored when not in use in a special pocket which is conveniently located on one
of the arms of the jacket beyond the elbow.
[0009] The rain jacket is also preferably provided with a small attached flap which serves
as an envelope for the garment when not in use.
[0010] The invention will be more clearly understood by the description that follows of
a preferred embodiment, description having reference to the accompanying drawings,
in which:
Figure 1 is a front elevation view of a rain jacket made according to the invention
and showing the hat out of its pocket;
Figure 2 is a rear elevation view of the jacket of Figure I in which the different
layers covering the ventilation window have been taken off;
Figure 3 is a rear elevation view as in Figure 2; additionally showing the wind deflector
rain screen covering the ventilation window;
Figure 4 is a rear elevation view of the jacket of Figure 3, further showing the envelope
flap over the rain screen flap; and
Figure 5 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 5-5 of Figure 4.
[0011] The illustrated rain jacket 1 is made of light non extensible waterproof material
and is adapted to protect the wearer's upper body B (Figure 5) from the hip up to
the shoulders while providing good ventilation. The garment further includes a wide-brimmed
rainproof hat 2 adapted to protect the eyes of the wearer. It spreads down over the
straight collar 3 of the jacket in order to securely protect the wearer's neck while
providing for air circulation and maximum freedom of movement. When not in use, the
hat can be stored in a special pocket 4 located for easy access such as being provided
on the front face 5 of the left arm of the jacket.
[0012] The front panel of the garment is vertically slit as shown on Figure 1. The slit
can be closed by a known slide fastener 6 which is covered by a longitudinal fold
7 overlapping the slit, in the closed position of the slide fastener, to protect the
fastener from rain.
[0013] The back panel of the jacket has an opening running along its full height, which
opening is covered by a screen secured to the edges of the opening to form a ventilation
opening 8, as can be seen in Figure 2. In order to be protected from the rain, the
aeration window 8 is fully covered by a flap 9 made of waterproof material of generally
rectangular shape. The upper edge 10 and the lower edge 11 of the flap 9 are fixed
to the back panel while the two lateral edges 12 remain entirely free along their
full length. This type of assembly differs greatly from the common type where a shorter
rainproof flat usually covers the upper back portion of the garment to which it is
sealed along the upper and the two lateral edges, the lower horizontal edge alone
being left open for air circulation. The present invention provides for much more
air circulation, the free edges 12 of the protective flap 9 being much longer than
in the common type. Moreover these free lateral edges actively enhance the ventilation
when the cyclist rides because they tend to catch the air streaming on each side of
the rider instead of floating passively in the eddies that form at the back of the
rider. As soon as the rider gains speed, the protective flap 9 of the figures 3 and
4 is inflated and lifted off the back panel thus providing maximum space for air circulation
under the flap 9 and through the ventilation window 8.
[0014] According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the upper edge 10 of
the flap 9 is slightly gathered and stitched at the top end of the jacket. The lower
edge 11 is detachably fixed to the lower end of the jacket by a piece of velcro tape
15 at each of the flap lower corners. This kind of releasable attachment prevents
the flap 9 from being damaged should one of the free lateral edges 12 of the flap
9 accidentally get caught by any obstacle like a door handle, for example. The lower
portion of the flap 9 is also stitched to the back ventilation window 8 by a vertical
median seam 13 which prevents the inflated lower portion of the flap 9 from moving
too far from the back panel where it would lose its efficiency as a rain screen.
[0015] Figure 5 is a cross-sectional view showing the flap 9 in an inflated condition and
showing the median stitch on the ventilation window 8. The upper portion of the flap
9, when inflated, naturally tends to keep closer to the back panel than does the lower
portion. This is the reason why, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the
invention, there is no need for median line of stitching on the upper portion of the
flap 9. It is for the same reason that the upper edge 10 of the flap 9 is gathered
before assembly: the pleats 14 provide for the extra material needed to increase as
much as possible the space under the inflated upper portion of the flap 9.
[0016] As can be seen in Figure 4, there may be provided a further small flap 16 over the
main flap 9. This small flap 16, which may be a small band of flexible material of
rectangular shape, preferably the same material as that of the jacket, is stitched
to the jacket only along its upper edge 17 and is intended to serve for forming an
envelope for the whole garment. With this small flap 16 spread out on a flat surface,
the jacket is properly folded behind the spread flap. The whole is then tightly rolled
up starting with the jacket, ending with the flap and forming a very compact cylindrical
bundle. Two parallel transversal strips of velcro tape 18, fixed on opposite sides
of the flap, are brought into contact when rolling up the flap 16 which thus becomes
a closed cylindrical envelope containing the jacket.
[0017] In Figure 2, it will be noted that the ventilation window 8 tapers slightly downwardly
and that the two velcro strips 18 of the back panel are located immediately outside
of the ventilation window 8.
1. A rain jacket, particularly for riders, comprising: a back panel having a ventilation
window running over at least a major portion thereof; a rain protection flap fully
covering the ventilation opening; means securing an upper edge of said flap to an
upper end of said back panel and means releasably securing a lower edge of said flap
to a lower end of said back panel, and wherein lateral edges of said flap remain free
of said back panel and said ventilation window whereby to allow air circulation between
said ventilation window and said rain protection flap.
2. A rain jacket according to claim 1, wherein said releasable securing means are
separable securing strips at the lower corners of said protection flap and on said
lower end of said back panel so located at said lower end as to cooperate with said
securing strips of said flap.
3. A rain jacket as claimed in claim 2, wherein said ventilation window tapers down
from said upper end of said back panel and said securing strips on said back panel
are located outside of said ventilation window.
4. A rain jacket as claimed in claims 2 or 3, wherein said separable strips are of
the velcro type.
5. A rain jacket as claimed in claims 1, 2 or 3, wherein said rain protection flap
is stitched to said ventilation window along a stitch line extending between said
lower and upper ends of said back panel, starting from said lower end and terminating
about mid-way between said ends.
6. A rain jacket as claimed in claims 1, 2 or 3, wherein said ventilation window runs
the full length of said upper and lower ends of said back panel.
7. A rainproof jacket as claimed in claims 1, 2 or 3, wherein said ventilation window
runs the full length between said upper and lower ends of said back panel and is formed
by an opening extending between said upper and lower ends and by a piece of screen
material sewn along the lateral edges of said opening.
8. A rain jacket as claimed in claims 1, 2 or 3, wherein said ventilation window runs
the full length between said upper and lower ends of said back panel and is formed
by an opening extending between said upper and lower ends and by a piece of screen
material sewn along the lateral edges of said opening, and wherein said rain protection
flap is stitched to said ventilation window along a stitch line extending between
said lower and upper ends of said back panel, starting from said lower end and terminating
about mid-way between said ends.
9. A rain jacket as claimed in claims 1, 2 or 3, further comprising a generally rectangular
band of flexible material secured solely along one of its edges at the upper end of
said back panel and having spaced separable securing strips parallel to said one edge
and on either side of said band.
10. A rain jacket, particularly for riders, comprising a back panel having an upper
end and a lower end; a ventilation window on said back panel running over at least
a major portion of said back panel; a rain protection flap fully covering said ventilation
opening and having an upper and a lower edge; means securing said upper edge of said
flap to said upper end of said back panel and means releasably securing said lower
edge of said flap to said lower end of said back panel; wherein lateral edges of said
flap between said upper and lower edges remain free of said back panel and of said
ventilation window, whereby to allow air circulation between said ventilation window
and said protection flap; wherein said releasably securing means are separable securing
strips at the lower corners of said protection flap and on said lower end of said
back panel so located at said lower end as to cooperate with said securing strips
of said flap, and wherein said rain protection flap is stitched to said ventilation
window along a stitch line extending between said lower and upper ends of said back
panel, starting from said lower end and terminating short of said upper end.
ll. A rain jacket as claimed in claim 10, wherein said stitch line terminates about
mid-way between said ends.